A method and system for automatically harvesting and screening plant embryos in multiple stages to identify those embryos that are suited for incorporation into manufactured seeds are provided. The method includes generally three steps. first, plant embryos are automatically sorted according to their rough size/shape and also singulated into discrete embryo units, for example by vibrational sieving. second, the sorted and singulated plant embryos are classified using a first classification method. For example, each embryo may be imaged by a camera and the image is used to ascertain the embryo's more precise size/shape. Third, for those embryos that have passed the first classification method, a second classification method is applied. For example, a pre-developed classification algorithm to classify embryos according to their putative germination vigor may be applied to the same image used in the first classification method, to identify those embryos that are likely to germinate.
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1. A method of automatically harvesting and screening plant embryos in multiple stages, comprising:
automatically sorting and singulating plant embryos;
automatically classifying the sorted and singulated plant embryos using a first classification method; and
automatically classifying the plant embryos that have passed the first classification method using a second classification method.
25. A system for automatically harvesting and screening plant embryos in multiple stages, comprising:
means for automatically sorting and singulating plant embryos;
means for automatically classifying the sorted and singulated plant embryos using a first classification method; and
means for automatically classifying the plant embryos that have passed the first classification method using a second classification method.
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The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/509,070, filed Jun. 30, 2003.
The invention is directed generally to manufactured seeds and, more particularly, to a method and system for automatically harvesting and screening mass-produced plant embryos in multiple stages to identify those embryos that are suited for incorporation into manufactured seeds.
Reproduction of selected plant varieties by tissue culture has been a commercial success for many years. The technique has enabled mass production of genetically identical selected ornamental plants, agricultural plants and forest species. The woody plants in this last group have perhaps posed the greatest challenges. Some success with conifers was achieved in the 1970s using organogenesis techniques wherein a bud, or other organ, was placed on a culture medium where it was ultimately replicated many times. The newly generated buds were placed on a different medium that induced root development. From there, the buds having stems and roots were planted in soil.
While conifer organogenesis was a breakthrough, costs were high due to the large amount of handling needed. There was also some concern about possible genetic modification. It was a decade later before somatic embryogenesis achieved a sufficient success rate so as to become the predominant approach to conifer tissue culture. With somatic embryogenesis, an explant, usually a seed or seed embryo, is placed on an initiation medium where it multiplies into a multitude of genetically identical immature embryos. These can be held in culture for long periods and multiplied to bulk up a particularly desirable clone. Ultimately, the immature embryos are placed on a development medium where they grow into somatic analogs of mature seed embryos. As used in the present description, a “somatic” embryo is a plant embryo developed by the laboratory culturing of totipotent plant cells or by induced cleavage polyembryogeny, as opposed to a zygotic embryo, which is a plant embryo removed from a seed of the corresponding plant. These embryos are then individually selected and placed on a germination medium for further development. Alternatively, the embryos may be used in artificial seeds, known as manufactured seeds.
There is now a large body of general technical literature and a growing body of patent literature on embryogenesis of plants. Examples of procedures for conifer tissue culture are found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,036,007 and 5,236,841 to Gupta et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 5,183,757 to Roberts; U.S. Pat. No. 5,464,769 to Attree et al.; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,563,061 to Gupta. Further, some examples of manufactured seeds can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 5,701,699 to Carlson et al., the disclosure of which is hereby expressly incorporated by reference. Briefly, a typical manufactured seed is formed of a seed coat (or a capsule) fabricated from a variety of materials such as cellulosic materials, filled with a synthetic gametophyte (a germination medium), in which an embryo surrounded by a tube-like restraint is received. After the manufactured seed is planted in the soil, the embryo inside the seed coat develops roots and eventually sheds the restraint along with the seed coat during germination.
One of the more labor intensive and subjective steps in the embryogenesis procedure is the selective harvesting from the development medium of individual embryos suitable for germination (e.g., suitable for incorporation into manufactured seeds). The embryos may be present in a number of stages of maturity and development. Those that are most likely to successfully germinate into normal plants are preferentially selected using a number of visually evaluated screening criteria. A skilled technician evaluates the morphological features of each embryo embedded in the development medium, such as the embryo's size, shape (e.g., axial symmetry), cotyledon development, surface texture, color, and others, and manually plucks desirable embryos out of the development medium with a pair of tweezers. The plucked desirable embryos are then carefully laid out on a tray in a two-dimensional array for further processing. This is a highly skilled yet tedious job that is time consuming and expensive. Further, it poses a major production bottleneck when the ultimate desired output will be in the millions of plants.
It has been proposed to use some form of instrumental image analysis for embryo selection to supplement or replace the visual evaluation described above. For example, PCT Application Serial No. PCT/US00/40720 (WO 01/13702 A2) discloses an embryo delivery system for manufactured seeds including an imaging camera, which acquires and digitally stores images of embryos. The images are then sent to a computer, which classifies the embryos according to their desirability (i.e., likelihood to germinate and grow into normal plants) based on predetermined parameters (axial symmetry, cotyledon development, surface texture, color, etc.) using a classification method disclosed in PCT Application Serial No. PCT/US99/12128 (WO 99/63057). Those embryos that are classified as desirable are thereafter removed by mini-robotic pick and place systems and inserted into manufactured seeds. The disclosure of these two PCT applications is hereby expressly incorporated by reference.
While instrumental imaging analysis and subsequent automatic insertion of desirable embryos into manufactured seeds have been successful in increasing the efficiency of the embryogenesis procedure, there has not been a complete automated process of harvesting embryos, e.g., removing embryos from a development medium, sorting embryos according to their size/shape and singulating them into discrete units (e.g., by removing any undesirable tissues or other debris), and classifying them according to their desirability for incorporation into manufactured seeds. In other words, there has not been an automated process that could replace the current manual operation of plucking desirable embryos out of a development medium and placing them in an array suitable for further maturation treatments. The present invention is directed to providing a complete automated process of harvesting somatic embryos, which could replace the current manual operation.
The present invention provides a method and system for automatically harvesting plant embryos. According to one aspect, the automatic harvesting method of the invention screens plant embryos in multiple stages to identify those embryos that are suited for incorporation into manufactured seeds, i.e., those embryos that are both physically fit for incorporation into manufactured seeds (not too big, not too small, not too bent, etc.) and also qualitatively determined to be likely to germinate and grow into normal plants. The automatic harvesting method includes generally three steps. First, plant embryos are automatically sorted according to their size/shape and also singulated into discrete embryo units. For example, the embryos may be washed off from a development medium (e.g., from a development pad) using aqueous liquid and sieved through a porous material. During sieving, the embryos may be further sprayed with aqueous liquid to facilitate removal and washing away of any undesirable material, such as undersized embryos, tissues, and residual embryonal suspensor masses (ESM), through the holes of the porous material. In one preferred embodiment, the porous material is formed as a moving porous conveyor belt so that the embryos being sorted and singulated are simultaneously transported to the subsequent classification stage. Second, the sorted and singulated plant embryos are classified using a first classification method. For example, each of the embryos may be imaged by a camera and the image is used to ascertain the embryo's size/shape. Those embryos within a predefined size/shape range are considered to have passed the first classification method. Third, at least for those embryos that have passed the first classification method, a second classification method is applied to further select those embryos desirable for incorporation into manufactured seeds. For example, a pre-developed classification algorithm to classify embryos according to their putative germination vigor (i.e., likelihood of successful germination) may be applied to the same image used in the first size/shape classification method, to identify those embryos that are likely to germinate. The embryos that have passed both the first and second classification methods are identified as suitable for incorporation into manufactured seeds.
According to one aspect, the first and second classification methods are carried out along a classification conveyor belt while the sorted and singulated embryos are transported thereon. In some classification methods, it is preferred that the embryos are generally arranged in a single file on the classification conveyor belt. Various means for achieving the single file configuration are proposed. For example, the classification conveyor belt may be arranged generally perpendicularly to the porous conveyor belt on which the embryos are sorted and singulated. According to this configuration, the sorted and singulated embryos transported to the end of the porous conveyors may drop therefrom by gravity onto the classification conveyor belt to generally form a single file thereon. To achieve sufficient spacing between the embryos in a single file, the initial rate of washing off embryos from a development medium onto the porous conveyor belt or the speed of the porous conveyor belt may be adjusted, perhaps based on the actual rate of embryos being dropped from the porous conveyor belt onto the classification conveyor belt as observed by a suitable optical scanning system.
According to another aspect, the method further includes the step of automatically removing those undesirable embryos that have failed the first or second classification method from the classification conveyor belt. For example, a computer-controlled air or liquid jet may be used to eject undesirable embryos. The precise timing of the jet activation can be computer controlled because the position of each undesirable embryo is precisely known based on the firing time of the camera that has imaged each embryo and the speed of the classification conveyor belt.
According to yet another aspect, the method further includes the step of automatically removing those desirable embryos that have passed both the first and second classification methods from the classification conveyor belt. In one embodiment, the desirable embryos are automatically transferred onto a receiving surface in an evenly spaced array, suitable for various further maturation treatments. For example, the receiving surface may be provided by a tray mounted on a motorized platform configured to adjust the position of the tray relative to the classification conveyor belt. By adjusting the position of the tray based on the known position of each desirable embryo as it is dropped from the classification conveyor belt, the desirable embryos may be received on the tray in an evenly spaced two-dimensional array.
According to yet another aspect, the method may include a step of automatically removing those desirable embryos that have passed one or more initial classification methods from a conveyor belt. For example, a mini-robotic system may be used to pick up those embryos determined to be within an acceptable size/shape range and to precisely place them in an evenly spaced two-dimensional array on a receiving tray. At this time, the embryos may be oriented uniformly, for example, with their cotyledon ends facing the same direction. The properly oriented and precisely spaced apart embryos in a tray may then be forwarded to receive further treatments, for example, drying and subsequent further classification methods. Thereafter, these properly oriented and spaced apart embryos in a tray can be readily transferred and inserted into manufactured seeds which, advantageously, may be arranged in a correspondingly evenly spaced array.
Classifying the embryos in multiple stages achieves efficient screening of embryos. For example, by classifying embryos using a relatively less sophisticated and less time-consuming classification method first, one can reduce the number of embryos to be forwarded to the second classification method that is more sophisticated and more time-consuming. Thus, by carefully selecting suitable classification methods to be combined, one can achieve increasingly selective and discriminating classification of embryos in a time efficient manner. Also, the present invention offers a complete automated process of harvesting somatic embryos, including sorting and singulating embryos (starting with removing the embryos from a development medium), classifying the sorted and singulated embryos according to their putative germination vigor, and further arranging those embryos classified as desirable in a manner suitable for further maturation treatments, e.g., in an evenly spaced two-dimensional array on a tray. Thus, an automated harvesting method and system of the present invention could replace the current manual operation of plucking desirable embryos from a development medium.
The foregoing aspects and many of the attendant advantages of this invention will become more readily appreciated as the same become better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The invention pertains to a method and system for automatically harvesting and screening mass-produced embryos, such as somatic embryos, preferably in multiple stages of increasing complexity to identify those embryos that are suited for incorporation into manufactured seeds. As used herein, an embryo suited for incorporation into a manufactured seed means an embryo that is both biochemically matured (i.e., likely to germinate and grow into a normal plant) and morphologically or physically suited for incorporation into a manufactured seed (i.e., having a size/shape appropriate to be included in a manufactured seed).
Referring to
Methods of developing somatic embryos are known and described in various publications, as discussed in the background section above. Desirable embryos are to various degrees attached to and embedded in suspensor tissues and residual underdeveloped ESM (or culture material) in the pad 16, together with incompletely developed embryos, abnormally formed embryos, undersized or oversized embryos, and other pieces of non-embryo plant material. The embryos suspended in a development pad 16 are forwarded to a Harvesting and Classification Room 12, in which the embryos (embedded in the culture material) are removed from the development pad and further automatically sorted, singulated, and classified according to their desirability. Classification may be carried out using multiple stages of increasingly sophisticated and yet time-consuming classification methods, to achieve progressively higher selection accuracy and operational efficiency. Those embryos that are classified as desirable are thereafter forwarded to receive further maturation treatments, for example, to a Post Development Treatment Room (Drying Room in the illustrated embodiment) 14 to be dried for storage and subsequent incorporation into manufactured seeds. The present invention is generally directed to the automated process of harvesting and classifying embryos, which occurs in the Harvesting and Classification Room 12. It is contemplated that the harvesting and classification are carried out preferably in a humid clean room conditioned to sustain viability of the embryos being processed.
Referring additionally to
Next referring to step “B,” the conveyor belt 24 is formed of a porous continuous belt 28 driven by a suitable motor (not shown), which sorts and singulates the embryos by sieving. As used herein, “sorting and singulating” means rudimentarily classifying embryos according to their size/shape and also separating the embryos into discrete units, for example by separating embryos apart and also by removing any undesirable materials from each embryo. For example, sieving by the porous continuous belt 28 achieves both sorting and singulation by causing any undersized material, such as undersized embryos and debris, to drop through its holes.
Specifically, while on the porous continuous belt 28, the embryos perhaps still embedded in suspensor tissues and residual ESM may be further sprayed with aqueous liquid from a second nozzle 30 to cause the embryos (and other adhering materials) to be further dispersed in the aqueous liquid. The liquid spray causes adhering suspensor tissues and residual ESM to be detached from the embryos and washed away and dropped through the porous belt 28. Any undersized or incompletely formed embryos will also be dropped through the porous belt 28. In one embodiment, the conveyor belt 24 may be of a vibrating type, as well known in the conveyor belt technology field, to further facilitate the sorting and singulation process. Any material dropped through the porous belt 28 may be collected in a waste receptacle 32 placed underneath the porous belt 28. Optionally, a second coarser porous belt (not shown) may be provided in series with the first conveyor belt 24 having the first porous belt 28, perhaps prior to the first porous belt 28, to carry away any oversized embryos and other oversized pieces of material. Thus, only those mostly singulated embryos of generally desired size and/or shape, which are more or less free of suspensor tissue and other fine plant material, remain on the first porous belt 28. By adjusting the mesh (hole) size/shape of the porous belt 28 (and of any other additional porous belts), only those embryos within a desirable size/shape range can be selected. It should be noted that, alternatively to the one or more porous conveyor belts described above, one or more sieves of wire or other mesh, for example, vibrating inclined sieves, may be used, although the use of porous conveyor belt(s) is preferred because they sieve and transport (to the next stage) embryos at the same time.
As described above, during steps “A” and “B”, the heterogeneous milieu (containing, e.g., acceptable quality embryos, unacceptable embryos, suspensor tissues, residual ESM, and other plant material) is dispersed in aqueous liquid and subjected to separation of components by physical forces (e.g., by sieving) that act differently on the components based on their physical properties (mass, size, shape, specific gravity, drag coefficient, wettability, etc.). As a result, fine plant material and embryo-adhering suspensor tissues are removed, with reduction in amount of any other undesirable components, to produce a population comprising mostly singulated embryos substantially free of suspensor tissues.
After the spray-assisted sieving process, referring to step “C,” at the end of the first conveyor belt 24, the sorted and singulated embryos are dropped by gravity onto another conveyor belt, or a classification conveyor belt 34. The classification conveyor belt 34 is arranged generally perpendicularly to the first conveyor belt 24 so that the dropping embryos will generally form a single file 36 along the length of the selection conveyor belt 34 suitable for subsequent imaging. In case the embryos tend to stick to the first conveyor belt 24 and cannot be easily dropped, the separation of the embryos from the first conveyor belt 24 may be assisted by various means. For example, the embryo removal may be assisted by an air/liquid jet (e.g., a gentle squirt of nutrient solution or puff of air-not shown) suitably arranged beneath the porous belt 28 near the end 35 of the first conveyor belt 24, or a fine vibrating wire placed perpendicularly to and just above the first conveyor belt 24 near the end 35, so as to break the surface tension and knock the embryos off the first conveyor belt 24. Alternatively, a dryer (not shown) may be arranged adjacent to the first conveyor belt 24 to dry off the embryos as they move down the first conveyor belt 24.
For the purpose of subsequent imaging, the embryos are sufficiently spaced apart from each other on the classification conveyor belt 34. To achieve sufficient spacing between the embryos in a single file 36, the initial rate of washing off the embryos from the development surface 16 may be adjusted. Also, the configuration of the reservoir 22 (or a hydrocyclone-type separator) may be adjusted, as discussed above, to achieve controlled dispensing of the embryos onto the first conveyor belt 24 and hence controlled dropping of the embryos from the first conveyor belt 24 onto the classification conveyor belt 34. While the reservoir 22 is illustrated to be positioned upstream of the sprayed sieving process in
In one alternative embodiment, the single file configuration preferred for imaging purposes may be obtained by utilizing the flow of liquid-dispersed embryos along a pipe. Specifically, referring to
As a further alternative method of achieving the single file configuration, referring to
Referring back to
In one embodiment, each image (monochromatic or in color) of an embryo is analyzed in two steps. First, referring to
Those embryos rejected either by the first classification step as not meeting the size/shape criteria (block 46) or by the second classification step as not likely to germinate (block 48) may thereafter be ejected from the classification conveyor belt 34, for example, by a precisely timed air/liquid jet 42 controlled by the computer 40 into a waste receptacle 44. The precise timing of the jet activation can be computer controlled because the position of each undesirable embryo is precisely known based on the firing time of the camera 38 that has imaged each embryo and the known speed of the classification conveyor belt 34. The use of an image-actuated precision jet to remove undesirable materials from a conveyor belt is well known in the food industry, for example to sort foods based on their visual characteristics. After undesirable embryos have been removed, only those embryos that have passed both the first and second classification steps remain on the classification conveyor belt 34. Alternatively, the ejector 42 may be configured to remove desirable embryos from the classification conveyor belt 34 onto another location, such as another conveyor belt or a harvest chamber, for further maturation treatments, as will be apparent to one skilled in the art.
The embryo classification step “C” may include further steps or stages of data acquisition and classification/screening operations. For example, after the two-step camera image analysis (blocks 46 and 48 in
The camera 38 may be of any suitable type as will be apparent to one skilled in the art, either monochromatic or color, though preferably a digital camera containing a charge-coupled device (CCD) linked to a digital storage device is used so as to permit subsequent digital processing of the acquired image. Further, the camera 38 may be a single-view camera (e.g., taking only the top view of each embryo carried on the classification conveyor belt 34) or a multiple-view camera (e.g., taking the top view, side view, and end view of each embryo). To acquire multiple views of an embryo, one camera may be moved into multiple positions, or multiple cameras may be used. However, preferably, a method and system for simultaneously imaging multiple views of an embryo using a single camera and suitably arranged reflective surfaces (e.g., prisms) may be used so as to shorten the time and operation required to obtain multiple views. Such a method and system for simultaneously imaging multiple views of an embryo are disclosed in a copending U.S. patent application, filed concurrently herewith, titled “Method and System for Simultaneously Imaging Multiple Views of a Plant Embryo” , which is explicitly incorporated herein by reference. A classification model algorithm may then be applied to each of the multiple views of an embryo to classify the embryo according to its putative germination vigor.
Additionally or alternatively, during the embryo classification step “C”, an apical dome located at the cotyledon end of a plant embryo may be three dimensionally imaged and analyzed to determine the embryo's germinant vigor (i.e., potential for rapid epicotyl development after germination). (See
Further additionally or alternatively, during the embryo classification step “C”, an embryo may be analyzed using a spectroscopic analysis method, such as IR spectroscopy, NIR spectroscopy, or Raman spectroscopy. (See
It should be noted that other imaging or spectroscopic technologies to determine the biochemical composition or morphological structure of an embryo may be used additionally or alternatively to any of the classification methods described above. As new imaging or spectroscopic technologies emerge or mature, these technologies can be readily incorporated into the present method of automated harvesting and multi-stage screening of plant embryos. For example, Teraherz rays (T-rays) may be used to spectroscopically image a plant embryo to discern its chemical and physical compositions. As a further example, fluorescent labeling technology, such as the quantum dots technology developed by Quantum Dot Corporation of Hayward, Calif., may be used to detect specific compounds and also to track biological events within a plant embryo. Still further, cosmic rays may be utilized to measure the density of an embryo. As will be apparent to one skilled in the art based on these examples, any other technologies that could determine the biochemical or morphological (structural) properties of a plant embryo, based on the use of a broad spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, may be used in accordance with the present invention.
It is noted that the method described hereinabove screens or classifies embryos in multiple stages, first by sieving based on rudimentary size/shape criteria (step “B”) then by increasingly sophisticated and hence generally time-consuming means during step “C”, such as an image-based size/shape analysis (block 46), image-based classification model analysis (block 48), image-based apical dome analysis (block 50), and spectra-based chemical analysis (block 52). It should be understood that more classification methods may be added as further additional screening criteria are developed. For example, a method of determining the disease resistance of an embryo may be developed using some sensor. Then, a classification stage to classify embryos based on the disease-resistance criteria may be added to further refine the overall classification process. As more screening criteria are developed and their corresponding classification methods incorporated into the present method, the method will be able to identify those embryos that are highly likely to grow into plants that are strong, healthy, and have various other desirable characteristics.
It is contemplated that only those embryos that have passed the previous classification stage will be forwarded to the subsequent screening stage so that a lesser number of embryos need to be evaluated by a later screening stage of perhaps increasing sophistication and complexity, since complex screening stages tend to be more time consuming. However, in some situations two or more screening stages may be carried out in parallel, substantially simultaneously. For example, when multiple views (e.g., the top view, the side view, and the end view) of an embryo are taken and analyzed according to a classification model (block 48), one of the views (e.g., the cotyledon end view containing three-dimensional information of an apical dome) may be simultaneously analyzed in depth to ascertain the morphological features of the embryo's apical dome (block 50).
Still referring to
Additionally, referring specifically to
For example, in one embodiment, after being removed from a development medium in step “A”, and further being sorted and singulated in step “B”, during the embryo classification step “C”, the embryos may undergo two classification stages. First, a single-view (e.g., the top view) monochromatic image analysis is carried out to eliminate those embryos that do not meet the basis size/shape criteria (block 46). Second, a classification model is applied to the same single-view monochromatic image to eliminate those embryos that are not likely to germinate (block 48). In step “D”, those remaining embryos that have passed both of the two classification stages are placed in a tray and dried. Thereafter, during the secondary classification step “E”, the embryos forwarded from step “D” undergo a further series of classification stages that are perhaps more sophisticated and therefore time-consuming. For example, the embryos may be subjected to a multiple-view (e.g., the top view, side view, and end view) color image analysis to eliminate undesirable embryos according to a classification model (block 54), and further to an apical dome analysis (block 56) and/or a spectroscopic analysis (block 58) to still further eliminate undesirable embryos, again according to a suitable classification model.
Then, a smart mini-robotic transfer system 60 under the control of the computer 40 is used to pick up and place each of those embryos meeting the basic size and shape criteria onto a receiving tray 54 in an evenly spaced array. Briefly, the transfer system 60 includes a housing 61 laterally movable along a rail 62, and a robotic arm 63 extending from the housing 61 and including a vacuum tip end. The robotic arm 63 is longitudinally extendible and also axially rotatable. The details of one example of the mini-robotic transfer system 60 suitable for use in the present embodiment are disclosed in PCT Application Serial No. PCT/US00/40720 (WO 01/13702 A2) incorporated by reference above. In the illustrated embodiment of
Thereafter, the index trays 54 are forwarded to receive maturation treatments, for example to the post development treatment room (drying room in the illustrated embodiment) 14 to dehydrate the embryos (corresponding to
At the end of the secondary classification conveyor belt 64, another robotic embryo placement system 71 is provided to pick up only those embryos that have been further selected as desirable, and to insert them into manufactured seeds 76. In the illustrated embodiment, the embryo placement system 71 includes a housing 72 translated along a rail 73 and a robotic arm 74 extending from the housing 72. After a desirable embryo is picked up by the arm 74, the housing 72 is translated along the rail 73 to a new position 72′, at which point the arm 74′ may be lowered to place the embryo into a manufactured seed 76 (or a tubular restraint of the manufactured seed). The details of a suitable embryo placement system is disclosed in PCT Application Serial No. PCT/US00/40720 (WO 01/13702 A2) discussed above. Various other alternative systems for transferring and inserting the embryos into manufactured seeds 76 are possible, as will be apparent to one skilled in the art. For example, the housing 72 and the arm 74 may be two- or three-dimensionally movable. Also, a tray holding the plurality of manufactured seeds 76 may be made one-, two-, or three-dimensionally movable so as to precisely position each of the seeds 76 relative to an embryo carried by the embryo placement system 71.
Notably, because the precise positions of the embryos on the index tray 54 are known, the embryo placement system 71 needs not have the capability to determine or correct the position and/or orientation of each embryo as it is picked up from the tray 54. For example, based on the known position and orientation of each embryo, it is possible for the embryo placement system 71 to precisely position the cotyledon end of each embryo within the manufactured seed 76.
According to the invention, a complete method and system for automatically harvesting somatic embryos are provided, which could replace the current manual operation including the steps of sorting and singulating and further classifying mass-produced embryos according to their putative germination vigor. Classification of the embryos is carried out in multiple stages to efficiently identify those embryos that are suited for incorporation into manufactured seeds. By carefully selecting suitable classification methods to be combined together, one can achieve progressively higher selection accuracy that would match or exceed the level of selectivity currently achievable only by a highly skilled technician. Further, the throughput of the present automated method of multi-stage screening (classification) is calculated to be approximately 5 million embryos per year, which is sufficient to meet the 1.5-2 seconds/embryo rate required for the classification of sorted and singulated embryos for the purpose of mass production of manufactured seeds.
While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it will be appreciated that various changes can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Hirahara, Edwin, Timmis, Roger, Surerus-Lopez, Heather, Folster, Harry G.
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